kwaw
c. 1906. (Date is per http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/el-supremo-arte-de-echar-las-cartas/11605580.) Book in Spanish by “Dr. Moorne,” El supremo arte de echar las cartas, to accompany a Spanish version of the Grand Etteilla III, in which the pictures are on the right, and on the left a Hebrew letter and other symbols. The deck probably existed in the 19th century, and had Italian as well as Spanish examples (DDD p. 114f). The book’s expositions are in part derivative from the earlier French booklets. An odd feature is that Etteilla’s “days of creation” are applied to the cards in sequence, card 1 for the first day, card 2 for the second, and so on for the 7 days of creation (at least in the version at http://www.scribd.com/doc/51537364/El-supremo-arte-de-echar-las-Cartas). The result is that what is pictured on the card usually has little to do with the day of creation as Etteilla characterized it.
"Dr. Moorne' was a pseudonym of Francisco Moreno (full name Francisco Teodomiro Moreno Durán, b.30th July 1864, d.1933). Other of his pen-names were Dr. Morral, Mateo, Bachiller Francisco de Estepa (Sevilla). He also had a book published on the Tarot in 1903 (an earlier edition of the above?) :
Los maravillosos secretos de los naipes. Arte completo de echar las cartas. Segun el sistema egipcio de 78 Taros y los metodos mas usados y conocidos en Francia y en Espana. (The wonderful secrets of the cards. The complete art of laying the cards. According to the Egyptian system of 78 Tarot and the most used and known methods in France and Spain.) Madrid, 1903, 272p., 19.5cm. Published by Pueyo.
Source: Gregorio Pueyo (1860-1913): librero y editor by Miguel Angel Bull Pueyo. p.126
I don't see your 'odd feature'? In my (pdf) copy of El-supremo-arte-de-echar-las-Cartas, the First Day of Creation is the second card, attributed to Beth, (Osiris. La Gloria Fuego Celeste. Primer día De la Creación. La Aurora), the seventh is card 8. The illustrations are pretty small and low resolution, but they remind me of the Catalan Taroccos, c.1895? I haven't as yet compare them though to see if they are the same.